For 25 years, the twin pregnancy rate has regularly increased in the majority of European countries and in the United States, by 35% between 1981 and 2006. Increased use of medically assisted procreation and older maternal age are the two main causes. At the present time twin pregnancies represent nearly 20% of premature deliveries. The rate of very premature births (\< 32-34 weeks) is 7 times higher in twin pregnancies than in singleton pregnancies. As prematurity accounts for 75% of neonatal morbidity and mortality, and extreme prematurity is the principal cause of neonatal mortality and of brain sequelae in twins, the search for a preventive treatment appears as a priority in perinatal medicine. The investigators recently showed in a prospective multicenter study that cervical ultrasound at 22 and 27 wks was a better predictive investigation of premature delivery \< 34 wks than digital examination. Recently in a randomized trial in a population of short-cervix singleton pregnancies, the premature delivery rate decreased by 40% in the pessary group compared with the usual management group. No other trial of pessary use in short-cervix twin pregnancies was published today. Recently, in a historical comparison of twins with twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome treated with laser, Carreras et al. have showed a decreased rate of preterm delivery with the use of pessary in case of short cervix. The investigators wish to set up a randomized multicenter study in France in the population of short-cervix twin pregnancies to show a potential benefit of the pessary compared with simple surveillance.
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perinatal death or significant neonatal morbidity until discharge from the hospital
Timeframe: 6 months